AAP sounds poll bugle in Haryana with rally in Ballabhgarh

AAP has set up a three-member national coordination committee under Sanjay Singh, Pankaj Gupta and Yadav to prepare plans for the Lok Sabha polls, including for its national manifesto and funding.

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AAP has already opened more than 325 offices across the country. In Uttar Pradesh alone, the party has opened 60-odd offices. Similarly, AAP has opened 35 offices in MP, 27 in Rajasthan, 14 in Kerala, 25 in Tamil Nadu and 10 in Gujarat.

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After Delhi results, AAP's membership has doubled; its present strength is over 10 lakh members.

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AAP's main effort-and hope-will be from nine states, the 'Nav Ratnas' of the future it seeks to forge: Chhattisgarh, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and Gujarat.

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Yogendra Yadav said that people are fed up with the existing political parties in states like Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and some other states. "There are corruption charges against politicians of both major parties. AAP has come to provide a true alternative, and we have received a huge response from the people," he said.

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AAP national executive member and party strategist Yogendra Yadav said, "In most states, political parties have been discredited and these parties have lost confidence of the people.

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Understandably upbeat after ending 15 years of Congress rule in the
Capital, AAP leaders now believe that their party will get a similar or
even better response in Haryana and Uttar Pradesh, states that account
for no less than 90 Lok Sabha seats.

AAP's main effort-and hope-will be from nine states, the 'Nav Ratnas' of the future it seeks to forge: Chhattisgarh, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and Gujarat.

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Yogendra Yadav said that people are fed up with the existing political parties in states like Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and some other states. "There are corruption charges against politicians of both major parties. AAP has come to provide a true alternative, and we have received a huge response from the people," he said.<br><br><br><br>

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AAP national executive member and party strategist Yogendra Yadav said, "In most states, political parties have been discredited and these parties have lost confidence of the people.

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Understandably upbeat after ending 15 years of Congress rule in the
Capital, AAP leaders now believe that their party will get a similar or
even better response in Haryana and Uttar Pradesh, states that account
for no less than 90 Lok Sabha seats.

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AAP has set up a three-member national coordination committee under Sanjay Singh, Pankaj Gupta and Yadav to prepare plans for the Lok Sabha polls, including for its national manifesto and funding.

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AAP has already opened more than 325 offices across the country. In Uttar Pradesh alone, the party has opened 60-odd offices. Similarly, AAP has opened 35 offices in MP, 27 in Rajasthan, 14 in Kerala, 25 in Tamil Nadu and 10 in Gujarat.

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After Delhi results, AAP's membership has doubled; its present strength is over 10 lakh members.<br><br>

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Short description:

The Aam Aadmi Party is on a roll, and it now wants to rock the Lok Sabha elections. Delhi in hand and the Lokpal Bill under its belt, AAP has readied its blueprint to take on established political parties in most states.